Racial Disparity in Gender Affirming Surgery: A Comparative Study on Plastic Surgeon Social Media Use
Genre
Journal articleDate
2023-05-15Group
Gender Affirmation Surgery Center (Temple University)Department
Plastic and Reconstructive SurgeryPermanent link to this record
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12613/9031
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Show full item recordDOI
https://doi.org/10.1097%2FGOX.0000000000005009Abstract
Background: In the past 5 years, social media use among plastic surgeons has grown to become a common modality used to promote one’s practice. However, surgeons lack the necessary ethical training to understand how their published content impacts patient opinions and behavior. Social media trends among plastic surgeons may contribute to the reduced rate of Black (non-White) patients accessing gender affirming surgery. Methods: In total, 250 gender affirming surgeons and 51,698 individual posts from social media platform, Instagram, were manually extracted and analyzed. Posts were assessed for inclusion and categorized by the subject’s skin color (White versus non-White) using the Fitzpatrick scale. Results: Of the 3101 included posts, 375 (12.1%) portrayed non-White subjects. Of the 56 included surgeons, White surgeons were found to be 2.3 times less likely to include non-White subjects in their posts, compared with non-White surgeons. Regionally, surgeons practicing in the Northeast had the most racially diverse social media accounts, with over 20% of all posts including a non-White subject. Analyzing data over the past 5 years demonstrated no relative increase in the amount of non-White subjects being displayed on social media, while social media use by gender affirming surgeons had increased by over 200%. Conclusions: The low number of non-White individuals portrayed by surgeons on social media perpetuates the racial disparity seen in patients accessing gender affirming surgery. Surgeons must be conscious of the demographic they portray on social media, as a lack of representation may influence patients’ self-identify and decision to utilize gender affirming surgical treatment.Citation
Robinson, Samuel G. BS*; Mandel, Asher BS*; Nicosia, Jeanette BS*; Siegel, Jacob BS*; Jahromi, Alireza Hamidian MD, MRCS*,†. Racial Disparity in Gender Affirming Surgery: A Comparative Study on Plastic Surgeon Social Media Use. Plastic & Reconstructive Surgery-Global Open 11(5):p e5009, May 2023. | DOI: 10.1097/GOX.0000000000005009Citation to related work
Lippincott, Williams & WilkinsHas part
Plastic and Recontructive Surgery Global Open, Vol. 11ADA compliance
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